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Can a tribunal be fair after all is long said and done?

Employment disputes can drag on for years, which inevitably raises the question of how long is too long for a hearing to be deemed fair. Mr. Boateng was originally employed in January 2017 by a gentlemen’s outfitters at their branch in the Strand before being relocated and promoted to hiring manager. After an incident involving the claimant and several colleagues at the Stratford branch on 23 July 2019, he was ultimately dismissed on grounds of ‘misconduct’ on 28 October 2019 after an unsuccessful internal appeal.

In early 2020, Mr. Boateng initiated legal proceedings concerning over thirty allegations of racial and religious discrimination dating back to 2017, in parallel with a claim for unfair dismissal. However, the hearing was postponed for over a year due to the pandemic and a formal insolvency process. By the time the case reached a preliminary assessment in 2023, the evidentiary landscape had shifted dramatically, as 21 of the 22 individuals concerned had since left the company. Moreover, the outfitter reported that 17 of those former employees were either impossible to locate or else explicitly refused to participate in the tribunal. As the earliest allegations were by then historical, the employer argued that they could no longer mount a meaningful defence, as the collective "memory of the firm" had essentially dissipated.

Both tribunals concurred that the discrimination claims should be struck out under Rule 37(1)(e) of the Employment Tribunal Rules, which allows for the termination of a case if a "fair hearing" is no longer possible. As almost every key witness had been lost, this was deemed to have created a "substantial disadvantage" to the employer, one transcending mere inconvenience. As discrimination claims require an employer to be able to call the specific person accused of discrimination to explain their mental processes, per Section 136 of the Equality Act 2010, the narrative was fragmented. Thus, no balanced picture could emerge, as only the “dismissing officer” was still available to testify.

This case reiterates that both sides have the right to a fair trial under Article 6 of the ECHR, thereby highlighting the importance of pursuing claims promptly and of keeping detailed contemporaneous records, as witnesses cannot later be relied upon to remain available or indeed helpful so many years after the fact. For employers, this case demonstrates the value of conducting timely and thorough internal investigations and of obtaining and preserving witness statements. Thus, even if a staff member leaves the company, a robust written record created at the time of the grievance can serve as a "documentary bridge" to ensure a fair hearing.

Source:Tribunal | 17-05-2026

A pattern of workplace harassment may be treated as a continuous event

A pivotal ruling has raised a protective umbrella over those impacted by a toxic workplace environment, potentially extending employers' legal liability by months or even years.

An Employment Tribunal had to decide whether the employers of a harassed employee, who was actively considering a change of employment, could use this intention to leave as a pretext to slash their compensation. An employee of the British Council was posted to Morocco in October 2018, where she was subjected to a campaign of sustained harassment by a colleague, culminating in her filing a grievance. However, the report blamed her for “sending mixed messages,” romanticising the offender’s behaviour as that of a "spurned lover". Thus, the British Council refused to uphold her sexual harassment claims, despite actual evidence of physical assault. She resigned and presented her claims to an Employment Tribunal for constructive unfair dismissal, direct sex discrimination, sexual harassment, and victimisation.

The first Tribunal upheld all the claims, save that of victimisation, finding multiple repudiatory breaches of the implied term of trust and confidence, plus discriminatory conduct for which the British Council was vicariously liable. However, the first Tribunal applied a 35% Polkey reduction to the unfair dismissal compensation and a 35% Chagger reduction to discrimination compensation (based on the possibility that the appellant might have left her employment with a reduced benefits package, plus evidence that she was contemplating a move to other roles). She appealed the deductions, leading the British Council to cross-appeal, contending that the sexual harassment claim was ‘out of time’.

The Appeal Tribunal allowed the appeal on the Chagger deduction, as the victim’s urge to leave was influenced by the very harassment she had suffered, while the 35% Polkey deduction from discrimination compensation could not stand. The Appeal Tribunal also dismissed the British Council's cross-appeal, finding that the sexual harassment was part of a continuous pattern of discrimination.

This ruling upholds the notion that "career intentions" do not take place in an ivory tower. Thus, any compensation awarded should reflect a hypothetically successful career, given sufficient dignity and protection from harassment. Crucially, the "limitation period" for such a claim does not necessarily reset after every individual act of harassment. If a company handles a grievance poorly or tacitly permits a "climate" of harassment to persist, then it effectively creates a single, continuous legal event, one which allows a claimant to sue for historical misconduct. Thus, employers, especially in light of the recent advent of the

Employment Rights Act, must act swiftly to nip all such behaviours in the bud to prevent them from potentially escalating into a weighty compensation claim.

Source:Tribunal | 05-05-2026